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Rev. James K. Ewer , Company 3, Third Mass. Cav., Roster of the Third Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment in the war for the Union 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: March 23, 1865., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register 2 2 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3 2 0 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1 2 0 Browse Search
Caroline E. Whitcomb, History of the Second Massachusetts Battery of Light Artillery (Nims' Battery): 1861-1865, compiled from records of the Rebellion, official reports, diaries and rosters 2 2 Browse Search
Archibald H. Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison the Abolitionist 2 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 10. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF MEDFORD, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, FROM ITS FIRST SETTLEMENT, IN 1630, TO THE PRESENT TIME, 1855. (ed. Charles Brooks) 2 0 Browse Search
Horace Greeley, The American Conflict: A History of the Great Rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-65: its Causes, Incidents, and Results: Intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery from 1776 to the close of the War for the Union. Volume I. 2 0 Browse Search
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13 Raynham 147 Reading 442 Rehoboth 149 Richmond 98 Rochester 572 Rockport 230 Rowe 282 Rowley 232 Roxbury 515 Royalston 667 Russell 314 Rutland 669 S. Salem 234 Salisbury 239 Sandisfield 99 Sandwich 49 Saugus 241 Savoy 100 Scituate 574 Seekonk 151 Sharon 520 Sheffield 102 Shelburne 283 Sherborn 444 Shirley 446 Shrewsbury 670 Shutesbury 285 Somerville 447 Somerset 154 Southampton 357 Southbridge 675 Southborough 673 South Scituate 576 South Danvers (Peabody) 243 South Hadley 356 South Reading (Wakefield) 450 Southwick 316 Spencer 678 Springfield 318 Sterling 679 Stockbridge 104 Stoneham 452 Stoughton 522 Stow 454 Sturbridge 681 Sudbury 455 Sunderland 286 Sutton 682 Swampscott 245 Swanzey 156 T. Taunton 158 Templeton 684 Tewksbury 457 Tisbury 168 Tolland 320 T
th Reading, Ma.Jan. 1, 1864Aug. 11, 1865, expiration of service. Craig, George,21Barnstable, Ma.Sept. 1, 1864June 11, 1865, expiration of service. Crockett, William H.,30Boston, Ma.July 31, 1861Oct. 18, 1862, disability. Cruise, William,18Southampton, Ma.Jan. 1, 1864Aug. 11, 1865, expiration of service. Curtis, Edmund B.,36Abington, Ma.Sept. 3, 1864Transferred Dec. 23, 1864 to 6th Battery. Curtis, Frederick N.,29Medford, Ma.July 31, 1861Jan. 5, 1864, re-enlistment. Curtis, Frederick N.,31MAug. 29, 1864Aug. 11, 1865, expiration of service. Donahue, Thomas,24North Bridgewater, Ma. Dec. 3, 1864Transferred Dec. 23, 1864, to 6th Battery. Drury, James,42Boston, Ma. Jan. 1, 1864.Jan. 3, 1864, rejected recruit. Duggan, Edmund B.,19Southampton, Ma. Jan. 1, 1864Aug. 11, 1865, expiration of service. Duprey, Edwin,23Boston, Ma. Sept. 5, 1864Aug. 11, 1865, expiration of service. Eastman, William H.,22Melrose, Ma. July 31, 1861Aug. 16, 1864, expiration of service. Eldridge, Ellery W.,19C
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 8: the Liberator1831. (search)
e North Carolina indictment and proposed demand for the extradition of Garrison and Lib. 1.175, 191. Knapp, seasoned its indignation at the Georgia offer with a humor still more fatal to Southern pretensions. Mr. Lib. 2.3, 7. Garrison wanted no better vindication than he found in the events succeeding the 22d of August, 1831, the bloody Monday on which Nat Turner and his fellow-slaves Niles' Register, Aug. 27, 1831, p. 455. attacked some dozen white families in the neighborhood of Southampton, shot or otherwise murdered them outright—but without plunder or outrage—and threw not only Virginia but every slaveholding State into the Ibid., Sept. 24, 1831, p. 67; Oct. 15, pp. 130, 131, Lib. 1.155, 162, 170, 174 190; 2.6. wildest excitement. Of the whites fifty-five thus perished; the blacks, quickly dispersed and hunted, yielded at least a hundred victims, of whom many were doubtless innocent. The deluded prophet, more fortunate than some of his followers, was hung: their fles
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 37: the national election of 1852.—the Massachusetts constitutional convention.—final defeat of the coalition.— 1852-1853. (search)
s which were not the subject of contention; also, certain propositions submitted independently as to habeas corpus, the right of the jury in criminal cases, the appropriation of public money for sectarian schools, and other matters. Several of the changes were shortly after made by amendments proposed by the Legislature, and approved by a popular vote. On the final day of the convention, August 1, Sumner attended at Plymouth the celebration of the embarkation of the Pilgrim fathers at Southampton. His tribute to the English Puritans, known as Separatists or Independents in English history, was a thinly-veiled tribute to the pioneers of the antislavery cause. Works, vol. III. pp. 269-275. At this period of heated controversy it was difficult for either side to avoid allusions, open or covert, on festive or literary occasions to the question of slavery; and others besides Sumner, even on this occasion, assumed the right to make them. For instance, Governor Clifford in a ref
1778. Thaddeus, m. Sarah Horton 19 Oct. 1789. Judd, Thomas, one of the first company, was here in 1635, and res. on the northerly side of Brattle Street; his homestead probably embraced the spot where the Craigie House stands, now owned by Professor Longfellow. He rem. with Hooker to Hartford. He was several years a Deputy or Representative of Hartford, and subsequently of Waterbury, to which place he removed. He was great-grandfather of Rev. Jonathan Judd, the first minister of Southampton, Mass., of whom Sylvester Judd, Esq., of Northampton, a diligent and accurate antiquarian, was grandson. K. Kelsey, William (otherwise written Kellsie), was here in 1635, and res. at the S. E. corner of Winthrop and Spring streets. He rem. to Hartford with Hooker. After his decease; his widow Bethia m. David Phillips of Milford. The town of Hartford, in 1664, offered him £ 10 to remove from Hartford with his wife. Hinman. Kempster, Daniel, in 1642 res. on the southerly side of th
Richard Hassell's farm (on the west side of Menotomy River) to Rocky Meadow, for which he was to receive land in payment. No Record is found of his family. Ann Gleason, spinster, administered his estate 26 Dec. 1690. Dorcas, perhaps dau. of John (2), m. Samuel Stone 12 June 1679. Sam-uel, m. Sarah Hill 15 May 1704. William, m. Elizabeth Ash 28 Mar. 1776. James, m. Ruth Fisk 1 Jan. 1778. Thaddeus, m. Sarah Horton 19 Oct. 1789. Judd, Thomas, one of the first company, was here in 1635, and res. on the northerly side of Brattle Street; his homestead probably embraced the spot where the Craigie House stands, now owned by Professor Longfellow. He rem. with Hooker to Hartford. He was several years a Deputy or Representative of Hartford, and subsequently of Waterbury, to which place he removed. He was great-grandfather of Rev. Jonathan Judd, the first minister of Southampton, Mass., of whom Sylvester Judd, Esq., of Northampton, a diligent and accurate antiquarian, was grandson.
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, I. List of officers from Massachusetts in United States Navy, 1861 to 1865. (search)
Asst. Engr.Phlox.North Atlantic.June 10, 1865.Resigned.Actg. Master's Mate. Coombs, Rowland L. E.,Mass.Mass.Mass.Aug. 11, 1864.Actg. Ensign.-Mississippi.Oct. 20, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Ensign. Coop, Henry J., Credit, Orleans. Credit. Southampton.Sicily.Mass.Mass.Oct. 29, 1861.Actg. Master.San Jacinto; Roanoke.West India; No.Atlantic.Sept. 28, 1868.Hon. discharged.Actg. Vol. Lieut. Nov. 29, 1864.Actg. Vol. Lieut. Cooper, William,Mass.Mass.Mass.May 9, 1864.Actg. Master's Mate.Ticond Asst. Engr.Carnation; Winona.South Atlantic.Aug. 7, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. 3d Asst. Engr. Plander, John E.,Mass.Mass.Mass.Jan. 4, 1864.Actg. Master's Mate.Rose.West Gulf.Jan. 8, 1866.Hon. discharged.Mate. Plummer, Thomas H., Credit, Southampton.Mass.Mass.Mass.Dec. 9, 1863.Actg. Master's Mate.San Jacinto.East Gulf.Mar. 29, 1865.Resigned.Mate. Pollock, Samuel H., Credit, North Brookfield.Mass.Mass.Mass.June 19, 1862.Actg. Master's Mate.Wachusett; Sonoma.West India; So. Atlantic.Sep
Colored Troops. Whitcher, Frank I. Sergeant, 2d Battery, Mass. Light Artillery, July 31, 1861. Second Lieutenant, Battery B, 1st Md. Light Artillery, Dec. 17, 1861. Resigned, Nov. 16, 1862. White, John Eaton. Second Lieutenant, 4th Infantry, M. V. M. (afterwards 29th Mass. Infantry), May 10, 1861. Mustered out, July 22, 1861. Captain, Union Coast Guard, afterwards 99th N. Y. Infantry, Nov. 2, 1861. Mustered out, July 3, 1864. White, John Phillips Payson. Born at Southampton, Mass., July 4, 1838. First Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon, 9th N. Y. Infantry (Hawkins Zouaves), May 13, 1861. Major, Surgeon, 10th N. Y. Infantry (National Zouaves), May 13, 1862. Resigned, March 10, 1863. Died at New York City, Dec. 3, 1882. White, Richard E. Born in Massachusetts. Second Lieutenant, 6th Iowa Infantry, July 18, 1861. Captain, Oct. 19, 1861. Killed in action at the battle of Shiloh, Tenn., Apr. 6, 1862. White, Whitman Vassel. Major, Surgeon, 27th N. Y. Infan
ectmen. Southborough. On the whole I am constrained to say that the war has made our men rather better than worse. P. Torry, Chairman Selectmen. South Danvers. The police say, that in several cases of individuals who were troublesome before going to the war, there has, since their return, been a marked change for the better; the subordination and restraint to which they were subjected in the army enabling them to govern themselves at home. J. Poor, Chairman Selectmen. Southampton. As to their habits, as a whole, we are decidedly of the opinion that they have undergone a change for the better while in the service of their country. Z. E. Coleman, Chairman Selectmen. South Scituate. None seem the worse, but many better, than they were before they became soldiers. It seems due to the soldier that some public notice should be taken of this remarkable and most gratifying fact of the absence in them of that demoralization which we surely had good reason to f
. Barker, Otis B., Pittsfield. Barker, Chas. T., Pittsfield. Barker, John V., Pittsfield. Barker, G. T., Pittsfield. Barnes, Mrs. Hiram, Goshen. Barrows, Horatio, Middleboro. Barrus, Mrs. Hiram, Goshen. Bascom, Gilbert, Southampton. Bascom, Geo. W., Holden. Bassett, Chas. C., Athol. Batchelder, Daniel V., Upton. Batchelder, Chandler, Upton. Bates, De Witt Clinton, Hingham. Bates, David H., Braintree. Baxter, Daniel, Brighton. Beal, Alexander, Dorc, Dracut. Richardson, Geo. P., Duxbury. Richardson, Albert, Winthrop. Robbins, Royal E., Waltham. Roberts, John, Waltham. Robinson, Joseph C., Maiden. Robinson, Enoch, Raynham. Robinson, Chas., Raynham. Rogers, Mary S., Southampton. Rogers, N. F., New Ashford. Rogers, John, Roxbury. Rogers, Miss A. P., Boston. Rogers, H. B., Boston. Rogers, Mrs. H. B., Boston. Ruggles, Miss Emily, Reading. Russell, Daniel, Melrose. Sage, Orrin, Weymouth. Sanbor